How do you know?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
For years pop stars were planting trees in ugly rectangular blocks all over the countryside to take advantage of the tax benefits. It wasn't a loophole, it was a government scheme.
Was the tax relief on film investment not a government initiative to boost the industry?
I doubt any of the footballers involved were looking to defraud HMRC, the were simply sold a scheme that wasn't as clear cut as they believed.
I take it you don't take advantage of the various tax deuctions available?
Results 31 to 53 of 53
Thread: Darren Jackson
-
23-12-2015 11:39 AM #31
-
23-12-2015 11:44 AM #32This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 12:05 PM #33This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 12:13 PM #34This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Anyway...if I recall correctly Jackson starred for the hearts and was a (if not the) key player in keeping them up.
Bloody good player for all 3 Edinburgh clubs, and very surprised he got himself into such a predicament. (although fully deserved if he was trying to avoid paying his taxes)"I don't have any regrets about not moving during my playing career. I was born a Hibee, my dad was a Hibee, I will stay a Hibee and I'll die a Hibee." -Lawrie Reilly
-
23-12-2015 12:17 PM #35This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
They are then *******ized by wide boys who can see loopholes the well intentioned civil servants cannot and are exploited.
Can you honestly say that some of the names on that list would have invested into such schemes without the massive tax advantages they were sold as carrying?
To answer your other query, yes I have ISA's and pensions, so do most other people with the means to afford them to a greater or lesser level.
It is my fervent hope that the next budget will introduce a universal rate of tax relief of around 30p and will restrict annual contributions further.
Far too much pension tax relief is obtained by far too few people.
I don't propose to get into the why's and wherefors of who can afford and who cannot these things as its a multi faceted argument, some of which but by no means all is determined by people's life choices.
My argument would be if you can afford a pint, holiday or any non essential expenditure unlike food, clothing heat and light and a roof over your head and any others I may have omitted accidently, you can afford a pension or ISA but choose not to.
There are some poor soul's in the world who cannot. If we can remove / reduce aggressive tax evasion then that money must be used to help them
-
23-12-2015 01:35 PM #36
My favourite Hibs player of all time.
He did f-all at Celtic and at Hearts so I don't really let the fact that he played for those clubs tarnish my memories of him.
We got his best years, fantastic player for us and I like the thought of him attending ER regularly with his son.
This news gives me no joy whatsoever. Companies and individuals the length and breadth of the country try to pay less tax. In an ideal world we'd be like the Scandinavians where they are proud to pay their tax and enjoy all the benefits that go with that. But unfortunately we now live with the legacy of Thatcher's "me, me, me" culture and anyone who proudly pays their tax (like many in Scotland do, and also like those who have no choice but to do) get the piss ripped out of them by the many elsewhere who do not.
Sad, but true.
If you get involved in these schemes you do so knowing that it is at your own risk and if it goes belly-up then you only have yourself to blame.
-
23-12-2015 01:39 PM #37
**** him. I've no sympathy for anybody who partakes in tax avoidance schemes. He was earning more than enough through his career to pay his dues like everybody else has to, so folk like him don't deserve any sympathy.
''It's always been just part of the culture. Growing up, for most working-class kids, is all about football, music or clothes. You might not have much money, but whatever you have got, you're going to look good.'' - Paul Weller
-
23-12-2015 01:49 PM #38
Jackson is a victim of the endemic greed prevalent in this sad epoch of the failure of late capitalism. Lots of more shallow individuals than him have been caught up in the 'last days of the empire' mentality. Sadly, most of them are in politics and banking, which only exacerbates the problem.
-
23-12-2015 02:31 PM #39This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 03:00 PM #40This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I should have said that I put a much larger amount in an ISA specifically to avoid paying any tax on the interest. I am trying to understand why it is ok for me to do that, if it is.
-
23-12-2015 03:13 PM #41This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It was a great strike in fairness though
-
23-12-2015 03:13 PM #42This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Classic case of HMRC deciding that they didn't care for a Government - instigated scheme. Challenged it in Court, and won the day. Similar to the EBT story.
Will be interesting to see if DJ, and others, take action against their advisers.
Sent from my GT-I9505 using Tapatalk
-
23-12-2015 03:18 PM #43This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
DJ says he has none, but it will be DR's job to find out if that is the case. First off, for example, he will need to check whether the film investment has any value. There's also the question of whether any assets were put into the names of others, and when. Also, whether there is a case for action against his advisers .
Sent from my GT-I9505 using Tapatalk
-
23-12-2015 03:28 PM #44This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
From memory it was a consolation goal in a defeat (one of many at that time) for his side. Whilst it was a good goal I don't remember him ever playing a significant part in a victory over us. There are even some tidy clips of him cowering on the bench during the 6-2 game.
-
23-12-2015 03:53 PM #45
- Join Date
- Nov 2009
- Posts
- 23,791
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 04:05 PM #46This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The problem with many of these schemes was that they were manipulated so that the principal activities were the tax saving and the film (in cases like this) itself was way down the line in the list of priorities and entirely spurious.
HMRC challenged many of these schemes on the basis that they were entirely fabricated.
There is the age old problem that the baddies pay more money to their advisers than the government do to theirs and that consequently they are better placed to find loopholes that the government advisers never considered.
I hope they do go after their advisers, although paradoxically that may well fall back to bite me personally if the FSCS rule they were covered and the advisers fold.
-
23-12-2015 04:10 PM #47This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
For some reason I have always loved that phrase, the phrase not the act!
-
23-12-2015 07:14 PM #48This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I don't know too much about this case, but I'm assuming that (again, like the RFC case) well-meaning schemes were stretched by people who should have known better.
I do have a certain amount of sympathy for the likes of DJ. Although, as has been said on this thread, they were guilty of greed, they did put their trust in people who they thought were entitled to that trust. That just reflects badly on the likes of you and me, and dissuades people from getting proper and decent advice.
-
23-12-2015 07:22 PM #49This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 07:27 PM #50This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
23-12-2015 10:49 PM #51
- Join Date
- Mar 2003
- Age
- 47
- Posts
- 27,266
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I don't think anyone does - how many folk have granny and grandad paying for their kids Christmas? How many have overdrafts and huge credit card bills?
How many young folk want to be famous - not for having a talent just to be rich and famous.
-
24-12-2015 08:58 AM #52
- Join Date
- Jul 2004
- Posts
- 1,275
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
24-12-2015 09:18 AM #53This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I too put money into ISA's and more often or not I look to put whole amount that I am allowed too. No one makes me do this and I do it because I can afford to.
I am not the most accomplished person, when it comes to financial matters, and I have a balanced portfolio which is mix of steady to middle risk shares which will make few bob and one or two risky ones. I had this all carefully explained to me, as you would do, when it is your money. I am more than aware what I was signing up for.
I would say I was motivated by security over huge wealth.
And what I would also say is that if my financial advice was to invest in an obscure film company, that can't realistically turn a profit, I would know full well what that was, and chose not to take that risk.
Log in to remove the advert |
Bookmarks